The 1991 IIHF European Women Championships was held March 15 – March 23, 1989 in Czechoslovakia. Finland skated to their 2nd consecutive tournament with a 2-1 victory of Sweden in the final, after trailing 1-0 at the end of the 2nd Period. Denmark picked up the bronze medal with a victory over Norway in the 3rd place game. The tournament holds the record for the most teams competing in a single IIHF Women's tournament (10) and most games played at the tournament (25).
| Attributes | Values |
|---|
| rdf:type
| |
| rdfs:label
| - 1991 Women's European Ice Hockey Championships
|
| rdfs:comment
| - The 1991 IIHF European Women Championships was held March 15 – March 23, 1989 in Czechoslovakia. Finland skated to their 2nd consecutive tournament with a 2-1 victory of Sweden in the final, after trailing 1-0 at the end of the 2nd Period. Denmark picked up the bronze medal with a victory over Norway in the 3rd place game. The tournament holds the record for the most teams competing in a single IIHF Women's tournament (10) and most games played at the tournament (25).
|
| bg
| - #F7F6A8
- #FFDAB9
- #eeeeee
- #eeffff
|
| dcterms:subject
| |
| dbkwik:icehockey/p...iPageUsesTemplate
| |
| Goals
| |
| Games
| |
| Date
| - 1991-03-15(xsd:date)
- 1991-03-16(xsd:date)
- 1991-03-17(xsd:date)
- 1991-03-18(xsd:date)
- 1991-03-19(xsd:date)
- 1991-03-20(xsd:date)
- 1991-03-21(xsd:date)
- 1991-03-23(xsd:date)
|
| Cities
| |
| Country
| |
| venues
| |
| Dates
| |
| Score
| - 2(xsd:integer)
- 3(xsd:integer)
- 4(xsd:integer)
- 6(xsd:integer)
- 7(xsd:integer)
- 8(xsd:integer)
- 9(xsd:integer)
- 10(xsd:integer)
- 11(xsd:integer)
- 12(xsd:integer)
- 14(xsd:integer)
- 15(xsd:integer)
- 16(xsd:integer)
- 20(xsd:integer)
- 28(xsd:integer)
|
| tourney name
| - IIHF European Women's Championship
|
| periods
| |
| Stadium
| |
| num teams
| |
| Year
| |
| Count
| |
| abstract
| - The 1991 IIHF European Women Championships was held March 15 – March 23, 1989 in Czechoslovakia. Finland skated to their 2nd consecutive tournament with a 2-1 victory of Sweden in the final, after trailing 1-0 at the end of the 2nd Period. Denmark picked up the bronze medal with a victory over Norway in the 3rd place game. The tournament holds the record for the most teams competing in a single IIHF Women's tournament (10) and most games played at the tournament (25).
|